The Miami Dolphins needed receiver help this offseason after trading away the talented, mercurial drop machine that is Brandon Marshall. Who did Jeff Ireland turn to? The legendary Legedu Naanee, of course.

Perhaps Ireland thought Naanee was a diamond in the rough. Never mind that he was last season's second-worst-rated receiver, according to Pro Football Focus, behind only Devin Hester, who played 300 less snaps than Naanee.

In a shocking turn of events, nothing has changed.

The dubious distinction has not escaped him this season. He is just tied for the third-worst receiver rating at PFF this season with rookie Kendall Wright, but Wright along with the two receivers who have worse ratings—Braylon Edwards reincarnate Greg Little and Titus Young—have received more playing time.

Both Little and Young have been on the field for over 100 more snaps than Naanee, which means the Dolphins' disappointment has been the worst receiver in the league on a per-snap basis. Rumor has it that he is on the field for his run-blocking skills, but he rates as one of the worst run-blocking receivers in the NFL as well.

After a preseason where some lauded his practice performance in which he earned a starting gig by attrition more than anything—Brian Hartline was injured for much of the offseason and preseason, and the only other real competition were practice squad fodder and late-round rookies—he has been nothing short of an unmitigated disaster at the position.

Lack of skill on game day alone should cost Naanee his spot on the roster, but the Dolphins are not exactly stacked at the position. Maybe there is another reason to cut him—perhaps he is simply cursed.

Consider this: Naanee has been targeted just five times this season. On those five targets, Ryan Tannehill has been intercepted twice and Naanee fumbled once in a morbidly comical football play. That makes three out of five targets that resulted in a turnover.

That is not necessarily a reflection of his skill, but it is an egregious addition of insult to injury for the Dolphins' receiving corps.

The Dolphins would be better served getting Rishard Matthews or Michael Egnew some playing time, or sitting in their base formation more often—rather than letting Naanee anywhere near the playing field again.